How we do it

This page provides insights into our research, collaborations, creative processes, methodologies and ways of thinking. We have added photos and footage from our archives to enrich your access to our ‘behind the scenes’.

All of the sections on this page contain ideas that intertwine, enmesh and develop in relation to one another. Feel free to read in a linear progression from top to bottom or jump around following what interests you.

Contents

Starting Points | Producer | Reserach & Development | Experimentation | Creative Process | Dancers | Movement Material | Artistic Collaboration | Design | Text & Dramaturgy | Community Casts | Forming/ structuring the work

Starting points

A few of our choreographic notebooks

A few of our choreographic notebooks

 

Our productions emerge from an initial idea, question or scenario that spikes our interest and becomes somewhat of an obsession. The richest resource we draw from is our personal experience and everyday life.

  • It might be somewhat autobiographical - the narrative for The Deluge emerged as we were researching during the UK Floods.

  • Biographical - as it was for Here, Still Here, Still.

  • A thought sparked from a book - the idea for The Hotel Experience came from Brooklyn Follies by Paul Auster.

  • An idea might emerge from something less formed, more rudimental, something as simple as a feeling - anticipation fueled A Readiness.

  • Or a sensation - the idea of being struck by lightening was the beginning for Axis.Exist.

    When someone has an idea, we share it, talk about it and imagine what kind of work this might lead us to make - is it rich enough? Can it be visual? Is dance a good medium for this idea? What can dance bring to this idea that other disciplines can’t? These ideas are bounced between the artistic team to open-up the possibilities for the work before we embark on a period of Research and Development.

Producer

Producer Lou Rogers with Artistic Directors Carrie Whitaker and Abi Mortimer meeting over a spot of lunch

Producer Lou Rogers with Artistic Directors Carrie Whitaker and Abi Mortimer meeting over a spot of lunch

 

Our producer Lou makes things happen. She writes the funding bids, communicates with the whole creative team, develops partnership for the company, books the space, writes the contracts and much more. But, it is an injustice to describe Lou in only administrative terms. She works in the studio with us, watching, advising, feeding back. She considers the work/ life balance of the artistic directors, and designs projects that are enriching, valuable and enjoyable. She picks up the pieces when things go wrong and looks for new avenues to progress. She sometimes has to deliver bad news and sort emergencies and also organises the celebratory drinks and meals out.

Lou is an integral part of our progression from starting points right the way through to performance. The advantage of involving Lou at the beginning of our projects is that she brings to the conversation her knowledge of the sector, performance work, venues and the interests of funders. This enables us to position the work-in -our-heads in the real world and consider our audiences from the outset. Who is this work for? What is the best performative context for this work? Any experts we need to talk to? How will we reach people? Uniting the idea with the strategy enables us to enrich our performances with ideas that are relevant, meaningful and communicative. Lou encourages us to take risks and explore our artwork in new contexts, and creates the supportive network and collaborations to nurture this process. She also contributes her own ideas to the work itself.

“I would like to see Luke as being less passive in this scene? can he be more in control of his own destiny?”.

In short, it is Lou’s role as producer to marry the strategy with the art and the idea with the reality.

Fancy yourself as a producer? Get in touch to discuss mentoring options?

Research & Development

Jannick Moth listening to interviews in his headphones in research for My Bit . Photo credit: Amy Morvell

Jannick Moth listening to interviews in his headphones in research for My Bit . Photo credit: Amy Morvell

 

Research and development are driving forces in our devising process to enable intense periods of risk-taking, experimentation and radical new departures. It allows us the opportunity to be frivolous with ideas, to take them too far and fail, safely.

For each new work we assemble a strong creative team of experts in their artistic disciplines with which to collaborate and learn from. R&D might involve prior preparation, for example we conducted dozens of interviews from people all over the UK on their feelings about borders in post-Brexit Britain for our outdoor work My Bit. Early R&D often involved us meeting with collaborators in cafes or pubs or other social spaces, and for The Hotel Experience we met in Hotels!

The conversations we have with a musician, dramaturg, set designer, lighting designer, film director or production manager are about opening up our imaginations as to what is possible and understanding the limitations. We share sources and references from art work, performances, film, books (and much more) to give substance to our imaginations, and align our thinking across disciplines.

This part of the process is extremely exciting as the potential avenues for the work are opening up rapidly, and tangibly. It can also evoke feelings of vulnerability as you are letting people into your world, that will change it and change you. Therefore R&D is as much about finding the right people with which to take on this journey with as it is about developing the artwork.

Experimentation

 

When we get into the studio we improvise with movement, voice, live instrument, sonic and technical elements; we storyboard, discuss, write and film. It is interactive and busy, several things can be happening at once.

During R&D and beyond into devising, our processes are social and dynamic. Unnecessary barriers between company directors, producer, apprentice, collaborators, dancers, participants are dissolved so that a great idea can come from anyone at any time. We work closely with all our creatives and collaborate with our dancers, we let them in, and allow them to affect our thinking.

“As a dancer with Lîla, I feel continually valued. I feel that my creative voice is welcomed and supported by their open and collaborative approach in the studio, where no voice is ignored. I found the atmosphere in the creative space to be playful, generous and accommodating.” — Jon Mewett

All voices have value and contribution is welcomed so that discussions are lively, rich and everyone feels invested. We follow this simple ethos, not just to support a happy work environment, but because we believe that if everyone feels comfortable, confident and valued, they make great work.

This process is also about ‘keeping all your balls up in the air’, it is not linear, ideas come in from above, down below, at right angles. They clash and tangle round one another, a brilliant idea can also be hugely problematic. It is a messy process where solution and problem have a reciprocal relationship and understanding the character of each requires collaboration with multiple creatives.

The Hotel Experience R&D

Watch this documentary by Nick Dare to gain an insight into Lîla’s R&D for The Hotel Experience.

 
 

The Incredible Presence of a Remarkable Absence R&D

Watch this documentary by Dougie Evans to gain an insight into Lîla’s R&D for The Incredible Presence of a Remarkable Absence.

Case study:
The Deluge

Joshua Pharo’s lighting design captured here with emergency flood light (top left) and halogen heater (centre) Photo Credit: Dougie Evans. Dancers: Sarah Golding and Aya Kobayashi.

Joshua Pharo’s lighting design captured here with emergency flood light (top left) and halogen heater (centre) Photo Credit: Dougie Evans. Dancers: Sarah Golding and Aya Kobayashi.

 

Let us explain this idea a little further through using The Deluge as an example:

Artistic wish: We would like the lighting to feel realistic, to further the narrative experience of the work.

Solution: In conversation with Lighting Designer Joshua Pharo, let’s use only found and emergency lighting (flood lights, halogen heaters, torches etc) and lets have the dancers interact with it, to situate them within the narrative space.

Problem: This will require the dancers to be available for large portions of the work to operate lights for one another.

Solution: Lets open the work with a series of solos and duets leaving the dancers not dancing available to use torches, operate TV screens, fans etc. to bring liveliness to the space.

Problem: We are going to need to rehearse with all this stuff very early on in the process as it will be part of the choreography. Can we buy it now?

Solution: Yes we can!

We work through these issues as a team, figuring out the best way to move forward. At various points inside the process we open up the research to the public and welcome feedback from critical friends. Following R&D we will have a developed a set of plans, or trajectories to inspire and inform the devising process. We will schedule time for reflection to develop our ideas before returning to the studio to make the work.

Creative Process

Michael Kelland and Luca Braccia rehearsing for My Bit. Photo Credit: Amber Tanc

Michael Kelland and Luca Braccia rehearsing for My Bit. Photo Credit: Amber Tanc

 

When we enter the studio for the making process we come equipped with all the knowledge we have gained from R&D and 6-8 weeks of time ahead of us to make the full-length work. We have a pallet of visual ideas, sketched out sections, movement material, some unformed music/ sound tracks. The set has been built or is being built, it will continue to be refined through rehearsals. The lighting designer has an intention and has brought in a few bits of equipment, that will be tested and refined during devising.

Lou (our producer) is in the space with us, informing the work through her knowledge of venues and audiences. The early part of the creative process is not completely distinguishable from R&D, trial, error, experimentation and improvisation still play a major role, but this time we are more productive, more focused on solving rather than posing alternative avenues (although this still happens). Making the work is an intricate, dense and complex process.

The following sections delve into our approaches to making one idea at a time.

Dancers

Kai Downham and Carrie Whitaker rehearsing for The Incredible Presence of a Remarkable Absence. Photo Credit: Dougie Evans

Kai Downham and Carrie Whitaker rehearsing for The Incredible Presence of a Remarkable Absence. Photo Credit: Dougie Evans

 

We work very collaboratively with our dancers to connect who they are to the role they are playing. Consequently, we hire performers that are inquisitive, inventive, playful and willing to explore their passions and vulnerabilities with a live audience. In all cases and especially when making narrative work it is important to us that glimpses of the dancers’ ‘soul’ can be located within the character they are playing. What can you use in your life experience to better understand the decisions, relationships and mind set of this role?

We use explorative tasks and improvisation to harness spontaneous feelings and then identify the best compositional and directional approach to ‘net’ these feelings so that they can be reignited in the architecture of the choreography again and again. This process is a tight collaboration between dancer and director at every step of the process. We are not actors, we do not have theatre training, but dancers have a deep understanding of the body and a unique ability to enter a relationship with movement and feeling that is visceral in order to understand a situation through embodied processes.

Therefore, whilst we continue an important supportive verbal dialogue with each individual dancer, ideas are explored through the rigor and exactitude of physicality. Through a deep connection with the moving body and an engagement with a number of related phenomena a particular 'world' emerges for the dancer that exceeds the material itself.

To encourage this process we direct the dancers to give agency to their unique expression of the narrative, so their story feels genuine, and their physical connections with each other reveals further interrelated layers. The process requires the dancer to be vulnerable on a daily basis so they open themselves up to new possibilities and explore sides of themselves that they do not necessarily connect with in their own lives. We therefore work hard to provide a safe and friendly environment that supports this risk-taking with care and consideration to their wellbeing.

“The space was always creative and open, filled with laughter and love for dance and theatre at it's heart. This allows the performer the permission to take risks and feel whole heartedly support and ‘looked after’ within the creative space.”

— KJ Mortimer

Movement Material

Luke Brown and Amy Morvell rehearsing for The Hotel Experience. Photo Credit: Dougie Evans

Luke Brown and Amy Morvell rehearsing for The Hotel Experience. Photo Credit: Dougie Evans

 

Although we make narrative work, narrative does NOT often initiate the creation of movement material. Why? because we find that starting with story can lock the mind-body into stereotypical or overly literal ways of thinking and behaving. We tend to begin moving in solos and duets from abstract tasks that situate the dancers inside creative, problem solving methodology. These tasks regularly challenge the dancer to creatively ‘dissect’ their body into many small elements, to consider all the possibilities of the joints and movement choices available . (If you would like to know more about our favourite making tasks check out our e-book.). The thinking around this approach is to discover narrative inside movement material as opposed to imitating life with dance. Imagine this:

If I gave you the task to make a solo based on the sense of loss and isolation, what would you do? What movement ideas spring to mind?

Now imagine you enter the space with material already on your body, a complex series of connections, falls and recoveries. If I ask you to dance this whilst carrying the sensation of loss and isolation, what might you discover? What would you discover form listening to what is already there? Can you learn anything about yourself, about where you hold these feelings in your body?


We don’t necessarily know what the task will create or what part it will play in the articulation of our narrative. Our major concern in this early phase is - is it interesting? There often resides a gut response about what this movement might potentially lend itself to in terms of character, relationship or theme (see text and dramaturgy below). Sometimes the answer does not come for a long time, sometimes it never comes and we let the material go. Then we begin a process we call ‘toning’- directing the material to colour or shade it to say what we want it to say. It involves making more of the qualities that are already suggestive of the idea and editing away movements that do not align with the intention. Finally, we direct the dancer to find qualitative sensations that guide the most detailed elements of performance, and this process continues up to and beyond each performance. This detailed toning relates to sometimes very small, even molecular ideas about the body- the navigation of breath, minute postural emphasis, focus of the eyes, your relationship with the audience. All of this is about centering the body with the mind, so that a feeling or sensation can be reignited in front of and with a live audience.

“I feel Lîla collaborate in the truest sense: open to discussion, good communication and new ideas, even if it means being taken into a slight discomfort zone occasionally. ”

— Holly Murray

Artistic Collaboration

Carrie Whitaker and Abi Mortimer thinking things through with musician Alex Paton for My Bit

Carrie Whitaker and Abi Mortimer thinking things through with musician Alex Paton for My Bit

 

We bring together dance, music, set, props, lighting design and text in our productions and collaborate with specialists in their field to bring new voices outside of our expertise into the frame of our thinking from the very outset of each project. Collaborators are invited and encouraged to pose ideas and nurture (or push!) our practice towards new approaches.

I have worked on several pieces with them spanning several years and they have given me really enjoyable scope for my own creative freedom… I feel they collaborate in the truest sense: open to discussion, good communication and new ideas, even if it means being taken into a slight discomfort zone occasionally. They have worked with me when I have pushed them to use more colour or something similar and I have appreciated when they have a clear vision for themselves. - Holly Murray

In practice this means that our artistic collaborators are invited to position their research and creation predominantly in the studio to experience the tone and textures of the ideas as they emerge. Shared studio experience supports creative exchange through a reciprocal relationship whereby we are all affected, orientated and challenged by the work of others. Whilst the director manages and steers the artistic vision for the work the creative space is one of deliberation, consensus, democracy. Let us use an example of how dialogue across disciplines can throw up ideas above and beyond the limitations of the discipline itself:

When researching My Bit we presented designer Hannah Bradbeer with a brief to devise a space for outdoor festivals that was contained by 2x2 metre boarders. Our research at this point, explored post-brexit Britain and people’s personal feelings towards boarders and boundaries as objects that separate and divide. Her thoughts about what materials might compose these boarders brought up important ideas. For example: wire - might suggest immigration boarder, brick - might allude to berlin wall, sandbags - strong imagery related to world war I, tape- could position the work to look like a crime scene. This discussion brought to light the power of semiotics (symbols) in setting up of the theatrical world, and entangled human-world relationships that might impact the reading of the work. We considered how immediate encounters with the scenic design might implicate historical or cultural connections and overlaps between the work and the wider world. Importantly it led us to consider what materials are steeped in inference that we wanted to reference and those that we didn’t; in short, what kind of work are we making? It was an important conversation to have early on.

Design

Natalie Rowland’s lighting design and Alison Neighbour’s set design for The Hotel Experience looking spectacular in this village hall.

Natalie Rowland’s lighting design and Alison Neighbour’s set design for The Hotel Experience looking spectacular in this village hall.

 

Our collaborations around the scenic, lighting (and to some extent, sonic) design are defined and inspired by two performative contexts:

Touring to predominantly small-scale theatres

We work with our collaborators to consider how we can redefine approaches to small-scale so that our audiences feel immersed by work that is designed to be experienced close-up, viscerally and personally.

Touring to non-theatrical spaces

School halls, converted churches, village halls - in this context requires that that scenic, lighting and sound design needs to be technically self-contained, easy to travel and install without any compromise on impact. We have responded to these practical ‘limitations’ by developing creative methodologies that holistically synthesise set, props text, music, light into the choreographic language.

“Cinematic ideas are reimagined as live theatre in an exciting integration of music, dance and visual design to create experiences that are magical, captivating and full of surprise.”

— Lou Rogers

Tech drawings for the multiple use of set and props including the magical suitcase, that transforms into a minibar.  Designs by Alison Neighbour for The Hotel Experience

Tech drawings for the multiple use of set and props including the magical suitcase, that transforms into a minibar. Designs by Alison Neighbour for The Hotel Experience

 

These two considerations have given rise to a Lîla aesthetic- that is to fully integrate design, sonic and performance elements to intensify emotions, give gravitas to a physical sensation and create a world that feels instantly tactile. We want the audiences to feel that the world emerges from the stage as a composite and intrinsic process between performers and environment as opposed to being placed upon it through high tech solutions ‘from above’.

The use of low-tech ‘DIY’ production elements that elevate ‘poor man’s props’/ household items to nuanced cinematic levels is an important player in this methodology. In a time of increasing digitalisation we love how this aesthetic reinforces fundamental contact with the body-within-the-world so that the performance space feels relatable, haptic and down to earth.

Narratively this approach also enables us to not only fully situate the performers as inhibitors of the world but also cast them as creators of it. For the dancer this means they they have to memorise a great deal of technical queues in-between and often during dancing. Through this approach we aim to make meaningful connections between people, place and our roles within it (for both dancer and audiences).

The Deluge has many examples of the choreography synthesising production elements:

  • The dancers create the effect of a train passing at night-time through shining a torch behind a desktop fan to cast rhythmical flashing lights on the silhouette of a dancer gripping to the railing.

  • Mobile phone ring tones and voice messages emerge out of a Bluetooth speaker hidden in a bag to both elevate and localise the sound and situate it within the performers experience of the world.

  • The use of a TV (we carefully selected a scene in a film that uses blue tones) creates flickering mood lighting on the face of a performer as he contemplates his situation.

  • Many tiny balloon lights emerge from the audience in the hands of our community cast in tune to questions heard over head. The lights search through the space as if looking for answers.

  • A transitory, magical room floats, surges and grounds itself around a central character (Sarah) through the puppeteering of a few ordinary household objects.

Sarah’s Room from The Deluge

Watch this example from The Deluge of how the choreography syntheses production elements.

 

Text & Dramaturgy

Nick Walker writing the script for My Bit

Nick Walker writing the script for My Bit

 

The composing and editing of text in a LÎla work is a process that is both embedded and a composite of the development of meaning and narrative (dramaturgy). Therefore, when discussing how text is devised, sourced or edited it is impossible to do so without contextualising its purpose within the greater objectives of a particular work. Here are a couple of examples to elucidate our processes:

When we made The Incredible Presence of a Remarkable Absence we explored text with the same treatment as we would a piece of movement material, applying choreographic devices to alter both its form and content. Each dancer was given a single line from Beckett’s play Waiting for Godot with which to work with and explored reordering the words, increasing its size (volume), the rhythm by which it is spoken, the dynamics (the way it is spoken). We fragmented it, inverted it, embellished it. We even rewound it. Then we tried dancing at the same time as speaking, mirroring the choreographic device by getting smaller in volume and smaller in the size of our action for example. Then we explored opposite approaches with voice and body to find tensions- the movement material increasing in tempo as the voice became slower and slower. We tried every other combination in between that we could think of. The relevance of this approach was contextualised by the absurdity of Beckett’s play that gave us permission to be bold, playful and expressive with our interpretations and imaginations and embrace the weird and the outright bizarre. If you watch the show carefully, you will notice that each dancer only ever says a few words throughout the whole show. Many times a single line is reinvented in different contexts.

When we made The Deluge and The Hotel Experience we collaborated with writer and dramaturg Nick Walker who brought a new methodology to our making- process. We begin by moving - always moving first. Nick observes the process and listens to the conversations that take place between choreographer and dancers, he is observing what qualities are already ‘simmering’ in the material as potential narrative avenues, ‘assessing’ what is essential to the material. It is a process of discovery rather than invention as it involves identifying what makes the movement interesting so that this essential element is preserved and eventually made vital. It feels a bit like turning the volume UP on an idea to attune to its nature, amplify its intention, and bring its meaning to the forefront. His provocations in response to what he sees are very often the beginnings of the toning process (See movement material) and contributes to the forming of character, themes and narrative. Nick works closely with the director to guide the dramaturgy of the work but the process involves collaboration across the entire creative team.

“My experience of working with Lîla has been one where I have felt truly included and valued within the process of creating the work.

As a lighting designer I'm so often brought in once there is a 'product' - something to light - and being able to be involved in The Hotel Experience from the very conception of the idea was a really exciting opportunity.”

— Natalie Rowland

Case study:
The Hotel Experience
(Joe Solo)

 

We are making solos, a task set by Carrie (director of the work) that involves the folding and bridging of limbs. Joe (dancer) devises a solo that contains ‘hints’ of a pulse. Carrie is intrigued by this quality and asks Joe to ‘pull this forward’ and focus on discovering a deliberate and meaningful pulse through the entire material.

Dougie (the musician) provides a metronome to keep the pace. Nick (dramaturg) suggests this solo could be toned with the sensation of an exhausted body on a monotonous treadmill, the sound of the metronome, like a clock, is providing a tiny but repetitive motivation to keep going.

Carrie begins the toning process with Joe to respond to this- “sometimes the ‘tick’ could be recalled like a jerk that wakes you up and the ‘tock’ could be embodied as a tiny surrender of a body relaxing into sleep.”

Nick drags the bed into the scene for context. Carrie and Joe explore the potential of this additional springy surface to accentuate the bounce in the material. Nick writes text to pull out the narrative further and Joe’s voice is recorded by Dougie speaking Nick’s script:

“room 3 broken fridge, room 4 dripping tap, room 8 burning smell…”

Dougie edits the text so that the words fall into the same persistent and monotonous pulse of the clock. The solo is so strong that Nick defines Joe’s character through this process - the maintenance man.

Joe’s ‘Tick Tock’ Solo in The Hotel Experience

Watch this example to see how toning developed this solo from movement material into a formed idea.

Film Credit: Millstream Productions

Community Casts

Aya Kobayashi in performance with our community cast from Bath Spa University for The Deluge. Photo Credit: Dougie Evans

Aya Kobayashi in performance with our community cast from Bath Spa University for The Deluge. Photo Credit: Dougie Evans

 

Since 2012 all of our full-length productions have integrated community casts who dance alongside our professional performers in one or more sections of the work.

Devising the role of the community begins at the inception of each production to develop a meaningful and imaginative scenario for the presence of new faces and energy. During research and development periods we invite local people to explore ideas for these sections to test narrative constructs and explore material possibilities.

We eventually compose languages that are fixed in its intention and expression but flexible enough to respond to the strengths and dynamism of each local community. For this reason, no two performances are ever the same. Whilst we ‘drill’ precision through the rehearsal process we place emphasis on individuals connecting to narrative, so communities feel connected to the world of the work and their role within it.

Therefore, it is important that the physical rehearsal is supported with artistic discussion through description, imagery, metaphor so that community members can reflect on their performance in a holistic and meaningful way. It is important to us that in performance all cast members occupy and constitute the same harmonious narrative space.

Forming/ structuring the work

Dancer: Kai Downham, Photo Credit: James Rowbotham

Dancer: Kai Downham, Photo Credit: James Rowbotham

 

We create work firstly in sections, each with a distinct narrative and physical identity. Often we have multiple sections going on at once to hold open the possible pathways of the narrative until each section is fully realised; we have coined this idea as holding your nerve; staying with the trouble until it is ready to be untangled. The work remains in isolated episodes until late on in the creative process, until we feel we have all the material and content we need to form the work. We work it out on paper first in discussion over many cups of tea. Each section gets a post-it note and is placed on a white board, where by we ‘audition’ its potential to sit in any dedicated position. This process is led by the dramaturg and debated amongst the creative team. We have two main considerations at play within these conversations, the narrative order of events and the choreographic order of events- they don’t always ‘agree’. For example, the most efficient narrative order of events might be as follows:

  • Luke - Broken Bird Solo (dark tone, staccato)

  • Abi - funeral speech solo (dark, emotional)

  • Joe - Tick tock solo (dark, staccato)

  • Dream Hotel quartet (Bright, light, expansive)

However, choreographically we have three solos playing out one after the other, each with dark mood, lighting and soundscore. The dynamics and tone have similar expressions and the rise and fall/ light and shade of the overall work could do with separating these ideas.

We structure again:

  • Luke - Broken Bird Solo (dark tone, staccato)

  • Dream Hotel quartet (Bright, light, expansive)

  • Abi - funeral speech solo (dark, emotional)

  • Joe - Tick tock solo (dark, staccato)

We debate - can the narrative play out in this order? What edits or additions do we need to make to support this version of events? Structuring the episodes together becomes a process of realising the various ‘candidates’ of the work and discovering which order brings the overall narrative and the individual journey of each character to the audience most effectively and vibrantly. In a sense, we trial many possibilities, interrogate each option, then dance each version before finally settling on the work.